Coney Island businesses booted from the Boardwalk by a new landlord don't plan on sailing into the surf any time soon, a lawyer for the group said yesterday.

"They're not going to be out in November and they're not going to be out in December and they're not going to be out for a while," said lawyer Marc Aronson, who was hired by eight Boardwalk merchants after amusement giant Zamperla USA ordered them to leave their storefronts by Nov. 19.

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"[Zamperla] can't simply just go and change the locks; they have to go to landlord-tenant court for an eviction," Aronson said.

The lawyer also charged Zamperla had led the Boardwalk tenants to believe their leases would be renewed, and indicated he was preparing a court case to prove it.

"Let me be very brief; [Zamperla is] bound by certain representations and promises that were made [and] have a legal affect," said Aronson.

Shoot the Freak owner Anthony Berlingieri charged Coney business owners were misled by Zamperla when the amusement company asked them to submit business plans if they wanted their leases renewed.

"They misled us to believe we were going to stay," said Berlingieri, who says he hired a lawyer and spent "thousands" to work up a 60-page business plan.

Berlingieri also charged city officials helped the merchants with their business plans, further making them believe they would get to stay.

"Everything was pushed into the area of us staying," he said. "Then you tell us to get out in two weeks?"

Grill House owner Steve Biterzakis, who has owned the restaurant for 17 years and was one of the businesses evicted, was hoping for a sympathetic judge.

"We don't know if the judge is on their side [or] if the judge cares about Coney Island," said Biterzakis. "But if [the judge] really has a heart, we have a good case. [Zamperla] got greedy."

Only three of the 11 Boardwalk businesses - Nathan's, Lola Staar boutique and the Beach Shop souvenir store - were given leases by Zamperla to return next summer.

A Zamperla spokesman would not comment on possible litigation.

"Coney Island's future should be worthy of its glorious past," the company said in a statement.

Berlingieri said he and the other Boardwalk business owners plan to fight it out to the end.

"There could have been a dozen ways to handle this situation instead of trying to steamroll us," said Berlingieri. "We're about to fight the biggest battle ever."